9 results
Search Results
2. Resonance beyond regimes: Migrant's alternative infrastructuring practices in Athens.
- Author
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Wajsberg, Mirjam and Schapendonk, Joris
- Subjects
RESONANCE ,IMMIGRANTS ,MEDIATION ,GEOMETRIC shapes - Abstract
Copyright of Urban Studies (Sage Publications, Ltd.) is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Residential segregation and educational performance. The case of Athens.
- Author
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Maloutas, Thomas, Spyrellis, Stavros Nikiforos, Capella, Antoinetta, Boterman, Willem, Musterd, Sako, Pacchi, Carolina, and Ranci, Costanzo
- Subjects
HOUSING discrimination ,EDUCATIONAL equalization ,SOCIAL classes ,APARTMENT buildings ,SOCIAL status - Abstract
This paper investigates the relationship among length of educational training, social origin and residential segregation in Athens using a large sample of 130,000 young individuals 15 to 27 years old, as recorded in the 2011 census. Hypotheses based on high binary correlations between the length of training and a number of variables indicating social origin and the social status of residential areas were tested with a generalised linear mixed model to determine the significance of the influence of these variables on the length of educational training. A separate analysis was conducted for each age group, roughly corresponding to education levels – upper secondary (15–18 years old), undergraduate (19–22 years) and postgraduate (23–27 years). It was assumed that at each level the range and the shape of the socially and spatially unequal access to education would be significantly different. A scenario regarding the city's important vertical segregation was also explored. It was assumed that living on different floors in the vertically segregated apartment buildings of the city's densely built central neighbourhoods might be significantly related to the length of educational training, even after controlling for social class/status. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Post-industrial Trajectories of Mediterranean European Cities: The Case of Post-Olympics Athens.
- Author
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Gospodini, Aspa
- Subjects
URBAN economics ,INNER cities ,ATHLETICS ,CULTURE - Abstract
This paper deals with clusters of post-industrial urban economies and their impacts on the spatial restructuring and the relandscaping of the contemporary inner city. It investigates such impacts by studying recent economic, spatial and landscape transformations of Athens, a large Mediterranean city in the geographical and economic periphery of Europe. The first part of the paper reviews earlier research on clusters of post-industrial urban economies and their spatial impacts, while attempting to present the topic in an international context. The second part focuses on a case study of Athens, Greece. It examines the planned clusters of athletics, culture and leisure that were developed for the 2004 Olympics; and, the spontaneous clusters of both culture, leisure and creative activities, and technology-intensive and knowledge-rich activities and advanced financial intermediary services that have gradually developed in Athens' inner-city areas during the past decade. The paper documents land use shifts and landscape transformations while highlighting the processes of formation of these spontaneous clusters and the urban policies involved; it also discusses urban governance issues in relation to the management of Athens' clusters, both planned and spontaneous. Finally, it draws conclusions about differences in post-industrial trajectories among large cities in the core of Europe and large Mediterranean cities in the developing periphery of Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Does Land Property Structure Affect Local Development Patterns? Evidence from a Greek Tourist Area.
- Author
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Triantafyllopoulos, Nikolaos
- Subjects
ACQUISITION of property ,PROPERTY -- Social aspects ,PROPERTY rights ,TOURISM - Abstract
This paper attempts to clarify the institutional context and local framework of landed property relations in the local development patterns of a rural space converted into an urban tourist resort on the island of Rhodes, Greece, through the diachronic analysis of cadastral data on land property ownership and non-market land property transfers and acquisitions. Direct and indirect state policies, land property structures inherited from the past, formal and informal institutions enabled agents to establish enterprises of varying types and size. Socially dispersed landownership is a structural resource that, through agency, influences local development patterns and land property is repeatedly implicated in the local production and reproduction system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The spatiality of counter-austerity politics in Athens, Greece: Emergent 'urban solidarity spaces'.
- Author
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Arampatzi, Athina
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,FINANCIAL crises ,SOLIDARITY ,AUSTERITY ,PLATEIA Syntagmatos (Athens, Greece) - Abstract
Grassroots responses and alternatives to austerity that have emerged in Athens and Greece call for a re-thinking of the recent neoliberal crisis through articulations of contestation 'from below'. This paper addresses this yet nascent theoretical debate through the notion of 'urban solidarity spaces', focusing on the spatiality of counter-austerity politics that emerges in and out of places and expands across urban space and beyond. From survival tactics grounded in Athenian neighbourhoods, such as local solidarity initiatives; to solidarity structures and cooperatives; and broader strategies of transformation and alternatives, such as the formation of a solidarity economy. These aim to constitute an empowering process of solidarity-making 'from below', and open up spaces for the practice of bottom-up democratic politics vis-à-vis austerity, a 'politics of fear' and crisis. The arguments raised here methodologically draw on activist ethnographic research in the 'Athens of crisis', between 2012 and 2013. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Unlocking the mind-trap: Politicising urban theory and practice.
- Author
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Swyngedouw, Erik
- Subjects
POLITICAL science ,MUNICIPAL government ,URBAN research ,DEPOLITICIZATION ,POLITICAL movements ,CITIES & towns ,CIVIL rights movements - Abstract
This contribution offers a critical engagement with the Critical Commentary paper of Beveridge and Koch (2017) entitled 'The postpolitical trap? Reflections on politics, agency and the city'. I argue that post-politicisation as a particular form of de-politicisation does not imply the disappearance of politics. On the contrary, it involves the re-ordering of the modalities of politics (contentious or otherwise) and of the possibilities of the political with far-reaching consequences for the modalities of egalitarian and emancipatory urban change. I explore the key contours of the post-politicisation argument and develop the thesis that 'the political' can never be foreclosed fully. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Ethnic Differences in Housing Opportunities in Athens.
- Author
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Drydakis, Nick
- Subjects
HOUSING discrimination ,ALBANIANS ,RENTAL housing ,SOCIAL conditions in Greece ,SOCIAL conditions of ethnic groups ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,ETHNIC discrimination ,IMMIGRANTS ,MINORITY housing ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This study uses a telephone field experiment to assess the degree of discrimination against female Albanians in Athenian rental housing markets. By examining a large sample represented by 122 urban areas, it was found that Albanians faced lower access to housing than the corresponding probability for Greeks. Moreover, Albanians faced lower access in newer apartments, above-ground apartments and repaired apartments. Meanwhile, Albanian home-seekers have to pay more than Greeks for these housing characteristics. Of further importance is the finding that Albanians have higher access to housing in areas closer to the Athens centre, suggesting the role of landlords in creating residential ethnic segregation. All findings are significant and suggest that Albanians both anticipate and encounter housing discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Book review: Athens and the War on Public Space: Tracing a City in Crisis.
- Author
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Boursinou, Maria-Nerina
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,NONFICTION - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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